U.S. tariffs, China trade tensions
overshadow G20 finance meeting
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[March 19, 2018]
By David Lawder and Luc Cohen
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Worries about the
potential for a U.S.-China trade war and frustration over U.S. President
Donald Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs threatened to dominate a
gathering of finance leaders this week amid strengthening growth.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who arrives on Sunday in Buenos
Aires ahead of a two-day meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers,
will be in a position of defending Trump's trade plans against
widespread criticism from G20 partners.
At the same time, he is likely to hear pleas for exemptions from the
steel and aluminum tariffs, said Edwin Truman, a former Treasury and
Federal Reserve international policy official now with the Peterson
Institute for International Economics in Washington.
"He's going to get an earful from them," Truman said.
"Mnuchin is going to be playing defense in his comments and he'll put
the best face on it that he can," Truman added.
The U.S. import tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on
aluminum, set to become effective on March 23, have raised alarms among
trading partners that Trump is following through on his threats to
dismantle the decades-old trading system based around World Trade
Organization rules in favor of unilateral U.S. actions.
Potentially broader anti-China tariffs and investment restrictions under
consideration as part of a U.S. intellectual property probe have raised
concerns that retaliation could seriously diminish global trade and
choke off the strongest global growth since the G20 was formed during
the 2008 financial crisis.
Reuters reported last week that the Trump administration was considering
punitive tariffs on some $60 billion worth of Chinese information
technology, telecoms and consumer products annually.
DEFENDING WTO RULES
Several G20 officials, including the finance ministers from host country
Argentina and Germany, said they will insist on maintaining G20
communique language emphasizing "the crucial role of the rules-based
international trading system."
An early draft of the G20 communique seen by Reuters contained that
phrase and added: "We note the importance of bilateral, regional and
plurilateral agreements being open, transparent, inclusive and
WTO-consistent, and commit to working to ensure they complement the
multilateral trade agreements."
But it was unclear whether that language will stand. Mnuchin a year ago
at his first G20 meeting in Germany pressed the group to drop a
decades-old pledge "to resist all forms of protectionism." This was
replaced with a watered-down pledge to "strengthen the contribution of
trade to our economies."
Germany’s new finance minister Olaf Scholz warned on Sunday that
protectionism could harm future economic prospects and said Germany
would continue talks to dissuade the United States from imposing planned
steel and aluminum tariffs.
The International Monetary Fund has forecast that global growth will
reach 3.9 percent in 2018 and 2019, with all G20 members showing
positive and accelerating growth due to strong trade and investment
flows. But it listed rising protectionism as among the key risks to
growth in a briefing note to G20 countries.
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Germany's Finance Minister Olaf Scholz attends a news conference
next to Argentina's Treasury Minister Nicolas Dujovne during the
2018 G20 Conference entitled "The G20 Agenda Under the Argentine
Presidency", in Buenos Aires, Argentina, March 18, 2018.
REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian
"The reemergence of unilateral trade restrictions may escalate
tensions and fuel global protectionism, disrupting worldwide supply
chains and affecting long-term productivity," the IMF said.
Meanwhile, Mnuchin's chief deputy at the G20 meeting, U.S. Treasury
Undersecretary David Malpass, kept up his criticism of China's
economic policies on Sunday. Malpass told an Institute of
International Finance forum in Buenos Aires that countries were
increasingly concerned by Beijing's move away from market
liberalization, its reliance on state subsidies and its use of
restrictive investment policies.
Increasing state control of China's economy "has not been good for
us and the world and will continue to cause difficulty," Malpass
said.
In Beijing on Monday, Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua
Chunying told a news briefing that Malpass' comments were "not very
friendly and not objective", and called on countries to cooperate
instead of criticizing each other.
A European G20 official told Reuters the European Union was keen to
avoid being seen as taking sides in any disputes between the United
States and China and urged Trump to negotiate directly with Beijing
to resolve such issues.
But German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Chinese president Xi Jinping
also emphasized multilateralism in a telephone call on Sunday,
pledging to work within the G20 to resolve global steel overcapacity
problems.
Officially, Argentina seeks to use the finance track of its G20
presidency to discuss the "future of work" as technological
advancements begin to cause unemployment across countries, and on
finding ways to finance an estimated $5.5 trillion in infrastructure
investments needed worldwide through 2035.
"We want to create a new asset class to close this gap," Argentine
Treasury Minister Nicolas Dujovne said in a speech on Sunday, saying
there is enough liquidity to finance infrastructure projects but the
way they are currently structured makes it difficult to lure
investors.
(Additional reporting by Francesco Canepa, Leika Kihara and Gernot
Heller in Buenos Aires, Andrea Shalal in Berlin, and Ben Blanchard
in Beijing; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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